登陆注册
18992800000044

第44章

'Yes--say I should be pleased if he would,' repeated Miss Aldclyffe, smiling. 'Good-bye. Don't hurry in your walk. If you can't get easily through your task to-day put off some of it till to-morrow.'

Each then started on her rounds: Cytherea going in the first place to the old manor-house. Mr. Manston was not indoors, which was a relief to her. She called then on the two gentleman-farmers' wives, who soon transacted their business with her, frigidly indifferent to her personality. A person who socially is nothing is thought less of by people who are not much than by those who are a great deal.

She then turned towards Peakhill Cottage, the residence of Miss Hinton, who lived there happily enough, with an elderly servant and a house-dog as companions. Her father, and last remaining parent, had retired thither four years before this time, after having filled the post of editor to the Casterbridge Chronicle for eighteen or twenty years. There he died soon after, and though comparatively a poor man, he left his daughter sufficiently well provided for as a modest fundholder and claimant of sundry small sums in dividends to maintain herself as mistress at Peakhill.

At Cytherea's knock an inner door was heard to open and close, and footsteps crossed the passage hesitatingly. The next minute Cytherea stood face to face with the lady herself.

Adelaide Hinton was about nine-and-twenty years of age. Her hair was plentiful, like Cytherea's own; her teeth equalled Cytherea's in regularity and whiteness. But she was much paler, and had features too transparent to be in place among household surroundings. Her mouth expressed love less forcibly than Cytherea's, and, as a natural result of her greater maturity, her tread was less elastic, and she was more self-possessed.

She had been a girl of that kind which mothers praise as not forward, by way of contrast, when disparaging those warmer ones with whom loving is an end and not a means. Men of forty, too, said of her, 'a good sensible wife for any man, if she cares to marry,' the caring to marry being thrown in as the vaguest hypothesis, because she was so practical. Yet it would be singular if, in such cases, the important subject of marriage should be excluded from manipulation by hands that are ready for practical performance in every domestic concern besides.

Cytherea was an acquisition, and the greeting was hearty.

'Good afternoon! O yes--Miss Graye, from Miss Aldclyffe's. I have seen you at church, and I am so glad you have called! Come in. I wonder if I have change enough to pay my subscription.' She spoke girlishly.

Adelaide, when in the company of a younger woman, always levelled herself down to that younger woman's age from a sense of justice to herself--as if, though not her own age at common law, it was in equity.

'It doesn't matter. I'll come again.'

'Yes, do at any time; not only on this errand. But you must step in for a minute. Do.'

'I have been wanting to come for several weeks.'

'That's right. Now you must see my house--lonely, isn't it, for a single person? People said it was odd for a young woman like me to keep on a house; but what did I care? If you knew the pleasure of locking up your own door, with the sensation that you reigned supreme inside it, you would say it was worth the risk of being called odd. Mr. Springrove attends to my gardening, the dog attends to robbers, and whenever there is a snake or toad to kill, Jane does it.'

'How nice! It is better than living in a town.'

'Far better. A town makes a cynic of me.'

The remark recalled, somewhat startlingly, to Cytherea's mind, that Edward had used those very words to herself one evening at Budmouth.

Miss Hinton opened an interior door and led her visitor into a small drawing-room commanding a view of the country for miles.

The missionary business was soon settled; but the chat continued.

'How lonely it must be here at night!' said Cytherea. 'Aren't you afraid?'

'At first I was, slightly. But I got used to the solitude. And you know a sort of commonsense will creep even into timidity. I say to myself sometimes at night, "If I were anybody but a harmless woman, not worth the trouble of a worm's ghost to appear to me, I should think that every sound I hear was a spirit." But you must see all over my house.'

Cytherea was highly interested in seeing.

'I say you MUST do this, and you MUST do that, as if you were a child,' remarked Adelaide. 'A privileged friend of mine tells me this use of the imperative comes of being so constantly in nobody's society but my own.'

'Ah, yes. I suppose she is right.'

Cytherea called the friend 'she' by a rule of ladylike practice; for a woman's 'friend' is delicately assumed by another friend to be of their own sex in the absence of knowledge to the contrary; just as cats are called she's until they prove themselves he's.

Miss Hinton laughed mysteriously.

'I get a humorous reproof for it now and then, I assure you,' she continued.

'"Humorous reproof:" that's not from a woman: who can reprove humorously but a man?' was the groove of Cytherea's thought at the remark. 'Your brother reproves you, I expect,' said that innocent young lady.

'No,' said Miss Hinton, with a candid air. ''Tis only a professional man I am acquainted with.' She looked out of the window.

Women are persistently imitative. No sooner did a thought flash through Cytherea's mind that the man was a lover than she became a Miss Aldclyffe in a mild form.

'I imagine he's a lover,' she said.

Miss Hinton smiled a smile of experience in that line.

Few women, if taxed with having an admirer, are so free from vanity as to deny the impeachment, even if it is utterly untrue. When it does happen to be true, they look pityingly away from the person who is so benighted as to have got no further than suspecting it.

'There now--Miss Hinton; you are engaged to be married!' said Cytherea accusingly.

Adelaide nodded her head practically. 'Well, yes, I am,' she said.

同类推荐
  • 张苍水诗文集

    张苍水诗文集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宋朝名画评

    宋朝名画评

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 蓬折箴

    蓬折箴

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Christian Science

    Christian Science

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明伦汇编宫闱典妃嫔部

    明伦汇编宫闱典妃嫔部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 韩擒虎话本

    韩擒虎话本

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 凰鸣惊世

    凰鸣惊世

    她,凤族王女,可惜天生血眸,不祥之人...他,顶端般的存在,为何会一直守候在她身边,是真的爱上了她,还是另有目的.....
  • 火影忍者之轮回眼

    火影忍者之轮回眼

    新手写作,大家多多支持一下!求给力,萌萌哒!
  • 紫微郎花事

    紫微郎花事

    京中有二丑,王爷与我。那年紫薇花开,诗会上,我们初会某烂泥塘边。数日后,再会暴雨倾盆的街上。二见投缘。义兄说,王爷是打着灯笼也找不着的好王爷,君子端方,不知会便宜哪家闺女。近来,听说皇上要为王爷赐婚,我心下略感油煎:想我顾眉君,脱了官袍抹了疤,亦是眉清目秀良家女,不知王爷他可曾留意否?
  • 幽兰花开

    幽兰花开

    孟幽兰为父嫁入龙岛,东海岛主龙朝阳性格怪异为试探是否真心,以帅气管家诱之一面化丑陋岛主以金银财宝惑之。最后因误会将魔魂花的种子种入幽兰身体里打入大海。幸运的她被西蜀仙山白云天所救,慢慢的爱上了他。然而魔魂花毒发作,慢慢的堕入魔道。不得不离开他,独自流浪寻求解毒之法。巧遇北荒魔窟帝噬天,被告之自己是魔门圣母,阴差阳错加入了魔教。听闻南疆蛊巫黎漫清有解毒之法,奈何被告之此花乃是上古巫妖之战尸骨上开的唯一的花,花开时便是魔魂附体之时,到时将是天地一场浩劫。
  • 修仙高手在校园

    修仙高手在校园

    胆小猥琐的蒋真,一次意外梦中得到了修真传承。逐渐摸索梦中修行之路。横行都市,驰骋花都。拳打各种装逼分子,脚踩各种牛逼二代。蒋真的座右铭。求不得便偷,偷不到便骗,骗不到便抢。
  • 世界经典科幻故事全集:远古寻踪的故事

    世界经典科幻故事全集:远古寻踪的故事

    我们编辑的这套《世界经典科幻故事全集》包括《太空环游的故事》、《星球纵览的故事》、《海底探险的故事》、《岛上猎奇的故事》、《科学传奇的故事》、《奇异幻想的故事》、《神秘人类的故事》、《远古寻踪的故事》、《机器大战的故事》和《古堡秘影的故事》等10册内容,精选了包括法国著名科幻作家、科幻小说之父儒勒· 凡尔纳和英国著名科幻作家威尔斯等人的作品近百篇,既有一定的代表性, 又有一定的普遍性,非常适合青少年阅读和学习。
  • 幻想雨季

    幻想雨季

    一个可爱萝莉失忆了,她以前的记忆都消失了,她该怎么办呢?她在一个贵族学院遇到了自己小时候的青梅竹马,她却不认识他,那个男孩很喜欢她,可是还有三个男孩也喜欢她,他们会怎么办呢,她最后会选择谁呢?她们之间会发生什么有趣的事呢。
  • 九劫帝君

    九劫帝君

    寰宇大陆,修士之风盛行,历经多年,无数大能历经艰难,得出修炼至理。天下修士,无论修行何种功法,修为如何,最后终将必须选择一条路——要么证道,要么逆道。证道者,顺天意;逆道者,逆天意。无论何种,只要成功,便可成就君位,为一方君主。……少年木易,出兰城木家,入这修士之界,战天才,斗世家,闯宗派,历经九劫,成一代帝君,封号——九劫。
  • 逆战之末日降临

    逆战之末日降临

    一场生化危机,拉开了世界动乱的序幕。世界各地爆发未知病毒,受感染者将成为僵尸,袭击人类。幸存的人类团结在一起奋斗求生,面对生存危机,亲情、友情、爱情,人性的闪光在末世的黑暗中愈发熠熠生辉。